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You are here: Home / Archives for 9 Other Resource Types / WBN News / WBN the Book

What’s Best Next Video Lectures Now Available (and 50% Off)

March 31, 2020 by Matt Perman

This seems to be a week for lots of product announcements!

I recently created an online course for What’s Best Next in conjunction with Zondervan. I went out there and recorded lectures on each chapter in the book. Then, they turned that into an  online course–complete with readings, reflections, and other assignments.

The course is excellent and available on the Zondervan online course platform. In the course you will learn:

  • A new way of looking at productivity, that is centered on the gospel
  • Why productivity matters — immensely — for Christians
  • How to fit time for hard thinking into a busy schedule
  • How to plan your week
  • How to identify your life mission and vision
  • How to get your email inbox to zero every day
  • And much, much more

The lectures are also available on their own — and, for this week only, they are 50%. You can watch them on Vimeo or get them on DVD.

Why get the video lectures? Teaching on the material is actually my favorite part. One of the big reasons I write on a subject is so that I can talk about it.

So by watching the video lectures, I hope you will experience the content in a new and deeper way. You will also gain some insights that I didn’t have space to go into in the book itself, along with new discoveries I’ve made since writing the book.

Filed Under: a Productivity Philosophy, Online Courses, WBN the Book

The What’s Best Next Study Guide is Out Today!

December 10, 2019 by Matt Perman

There is now a study guide for What’s Best Next, and it is out today! Zondervan has done an excellent job with it and I commend it to you in two ways.

First, it can be helpful for individual review and study. If you’ve read What’s Best Next and would like to review the concepts or go deeper, this is a great way to do it.

Second, the study guide now makes it much easier to go through the book in groups. Group study and discussion is one of the best ways to understand the concepts and get them to stick. Now this study guide can help you do that.

The study guide can be used simply in conjunction with the book itself. But here is some more good news: it can be also used in conjunction with the new video series from Zondervan. Either way, the study guide is a helpful resource.

So if you have benefited from What’s Best Next or are interested in checking it out, I commend the study guide to you.

And if you know of someone who has been helped by What’s Best Next, would you consider letting them know that this resource is now available? Thank you!

Filed Under: WBN News, WBN the Book

Coming Next Week: The What’s Best Next Video Study (and Study Guide)

December 4, 2019 by Matt Perman

I cannot believe that What’s Best Next has been out for more than 5 years now. The book continues to sell and I am constantly hearing from people about the impact it has had on them — as well as from people who have just picked it up and are reading it for the first time.

I have exciting news for those who would like to go deeper with the book or go through it as a group experience: we have created a video study and study guide, and they release next Tuesday.

The Video Study

I went to the Zondervan headquarters to record the video sessions last November. I taught through the entire book, doing each chapter as one session. This is one of my favorite things to do. I enjoy writing (usually after it is done), but most of all I enjoy doing speaking events and being able to present on the book through keynotes or workshops.

The video study allowed me to do that in a format that is now accessible for anyone. For each session, I teach on the most importance concepts in the chapter while introducing some new insights as well. These sessions are good to watch as part of a Bible study or church group, or individually.

You can get them as a DVD through Amazon. Since less and less people have DVD players these days, you can also watch them online by taking the What’s Best Next online course at the Zondervan website (releasing next week). If you like, the course also has a couple assignments as part of it, in addition to the videos.

The Study Guide

The study guide is an excellent companion to the videos or just for going deeper with the book itself. Beth Graybill developed the questions and content for each chapter, based on the video sessions and the book. She did an amazing job. I myself have found the study guide to be a helpful review of the book and to provide excellent questions that get me to think more deeply.

So I highly recommend picking up the study guide, whether for yourself or to take a group through in your church, small group, ministry, or workplace!

 

Filed Under: WBN Product News, WBN the Book

What’s Best Next on Bold TV

November 27, 2018 by Matt Perman

I was on Bold TV a few weeks ago talking about What’s Best Next and how the Golden Rule is at the heart of how to be productive. I had a great time, and you can watch the segment above or watch it on their website.

I’d also recommend Bold TV in general as something to check out. It’s a great example of innovation and, beyond that, the business philosophy of respect that I advocate for in my books and on this blog. It especially does this in the realm of politics, where respect is especially needed today.

Bold TV is a digitally native news network committed to bipartisan dialogue and innovation for people, businesses, and communities. It was founded in conjunction with Al Roker Entertainment. Bold hosts three one-hour online shows per week (Bold Politics, Bold Life, and Bold Biz), and you can also access the segments (as well as relevant articles) on their website. Their live shows run on their Facebook page on Fridays beginning at 10:00 Eastern.

Bold Politics is co-hosted by Carrie Sheffield and Clay Aiken. Carrie is the founder of Bold, a leading entrepreneur, a political analyst, and had an accomplished career in journalism and finance prior to beginning Bold. Clay, as you may know, should have won the second season of American Idol! (Though Ruben Studdard, who won that year, was great also.) He is also very sharp politically and in 2014 ran for congress in North Carolina’s second congressional district.

Here are two key things to note.

Digitally Native and Innovative

First, Bold TV is digitally native. That is, it has the principles of online communication and the new economy baked into it from the start. Instead of being a meatball sundae of taking an older business model and retrofitting the Internet on top of it, it shows us what a “digital first” media business model looks like. As such, it is at the leading edge of new media programming today.

Bi-Partisan

Second, Bold is bi-partisan and dialogues respectfully about differing viewpoints. It seems like so much political discourse today is carried out with a bitter spirit, and that many news outlets today are profiting from conflict. Regardless of how strongly we feel about things, it does not have to be that way. You can disagree with someone and still respect them. This is how discussion and debate are supposed to proceed.

Bold embodies this, bringing on guests from both sides of the political spectrum. Further, the hosts themselves represent this, as Carrie is a strong conservative and Clay Aiken is on the liberal side.

Instead of seeking to profit from conflict, Bold is based on cooperation—which is a much-overlooked, but central, principle of the new economy. Businesses that seek to profit from conflict are operating according to the old model, and this will not last.

Bold’s style represents a much better way forward in the political discussion of our nation today. Bold TV is worth checking out and tuning in to as a leader in this much better (and, I would argue, more effective and more human) approach.

 

Filed Under: WBN the Book

Time is Running Out to Pre-Order Unstuck (and why does that matter?)

April 27, 2018 by Matt Perman

Unstuck releases Tuesday!

Most people tend to wait to purchase a book until it actually releases — which makes a lot of sense!

But there are two reasons to pre-order it now, in advance of launch.

1. To ensure you get your copy next week
When What’s Best Next came out, Amazon and other bookstores ran out within two days. Zondervan did a quick reprint, but it took about another week for those books to get into stock. By pre-ordering, you’ll ensure you get the book on the release date.

2. You get the bonuses by pre-ordering
The bonuses include 4 additional chapters on how to create your mission on a God-centered foundation that I wanted to include in the book, but which didn’t fit. These chapters go into much more detail than the chapter on mission in What’s Best Next and represent some of my most foundational thinking on the subject. I think you will find them very helpful.

Life planning and mission statements are more popular than ever now; yet, I don’t know of anything that goes into the detail on how to be truly God-centered in our mission and life plan like these chapters. Many of the current books and resources on life planning give a helpful framework, but do not explicitly show how God’s purposes relate to, define, and ought to inform our life plans.

I take all the great recent works on the mission of God, being missional, faith and work integration, the creation mandate, exilic discipleship, the holistic plot line of Scripture, and more, and show how it comes together to help us understand and create our own mission and life plan.

So, if you are so inclined, go pre-order How to Get Unstuck! Then go here to enter your email and claim your bonus chapters.

Filed Under: WBN the Book

Introducing the Updated What’s Best Next

October 26, 2017 by Matt Perman

It’s been awhile! We have redesigned our website and made updates to what we are doing as an organization that we’d love to share with you.

Website Updates

The first thing you might notice is that we now have a much-improved graphic look and organization for the site, making it easier to find and read content you are interested in.

The website also gives more information on What’s Best Next as an organization in the About section. Read especially about our mission, values, and what we mean by “gospel-driven productivity.”

You can also now more easily buy books in the store, and we have more products to come.

I am getting back to blogging again, so there will be new free content coming regularly again. Also, we will be posting new articles, messages, and videos to build out the resources section even more fully for you.

Updates on the Organization

As an organization, we have refined what we are about. Here is what we do: we provide resources and training to help you be more effective, in a God-centered way.

That’s what we do. Why do we do it? So that you can do your work with more peace of mind, greater effectiveness, and in a way that honors God and serves others most fully. That’s where the greatest fulfillment is found!

We will share more with you in the coming weeks on the new services and products we will be offering. To start, here are two key things we’re focusing on right now: workshops and coaching.

Book a Workshop

I’ve been doing keynote speaking and workshops for a while, but haven’t done much to promote them. Now we’re making it more widely known. Check out the speaking page to learn more about how to bring me in for staff training or another workshop.

Sign Up for Productivity Coaching

This is perhaps the biggest new thing. We have provided coaching for a while, but now we are giving it greater focus. We love doing it and have been seeing lives changed.

In a nutshell, reading and doing training are great. But the way to really take things to the next level is to apply gospel-driven productivity with the help of a coach. As Andy Stanley has said,

You will never maximize your potential in any area without coaching. It is impossible. You may be good. You may even be better than anyone else. But without outside input you will never be as good as you could be. We all do better when somebody is watching and evaluating (The Next Generation Leader, 104).

So we’re offering coaching and have begun training other coaches to expand our coaching over the next year. Learn more and let us know if you are interested!

Thanks for being a great website community over the years. We are excited about these new updates and offerings and can’t wait to serve you more fully.

Filed Under: WBN the Book

Business is Art

March 8, 2016 by James Kinnard

workbench

This is a great perspective from Work the System by Sam Carpenter:

Who says art must include a canvas, sculpture, or musical instrument? Art is creativity, and is there a better example of a creative endeavor than the machinations of building a successful business? Indeed, business is art in its purest form! The painter and the musician shouldn’t scoff at the entrepreneur or corporate chief who must take hard, cold life – sights, sounds, events, things, people – and stir them into an efficient enough mixture to produce a successful business. Business is art. It’s a heroic undertaking, and with it lies two superb by-products: tangible value to others–employees and customers–and personal income for the creator.

Filed Under: Business, Entrepreneurship, WBN the Book

H3 Leadership Q&A with Brad Lomenick

October 5, 2015 by Matt Perman

Brad Lomenick’s latest book H3 Leadership: Be Humble. Stay Hungry. Always Hustle just released at the end of last month.

I highly recommend anything Brad writes. His experience leading Catalyst and working with some of the greatest thought leaders of the day give him a unique angle and depth of insight.

In this book Brad identifies what he describes as the 20 key habits that great leader shave in common, all built within the foundational elements of H3- Humble, Hungry, and Hustle.

Here are a few Q&A’s on the book.

Can you give us a quick overview of the book?

H3 Leadership is an application driven, practical leadership playbook that provides a proven process and much needed guidance on how to not only run, but finish well in the leadership race. Readers of this highly practical book will find it chock-full of easy-to-incorporate tips for catalytic leadership and ready to install strategies for living out the transformational habits of a leader.

Breaking down the “what” and “how daily leadership habits and routines that will awaken and transform the way you lead, H3 Leadership is a strategic guide and roadmap that uncovers and clearly defines the 20 key habits that will build your core leadership framework and establish a clear path to long-term sustainable influence. These 20 key Habits are not grand gestures of power, but simple practices that can easily be implemented into everyday life. 20 Key habits all great leaders have in common and essential to all effective leaders.

Based on over a decade of work with Catalyst and the gathered insights of some of America’s most respected leaders from wide ranging fields, H3 Leadership offers 20 key leadership habits that will teach and train you to be a better, stronger and ultimately a more effective leader. A “how to put your leadership into practice” book focused on the habits a leader must form to lead now, and lead well.

True leadership can be complex. I’m trying to keep it simple with the three transformational habits of leadership: be humble, stay hungry, always hustle. These powerful words describe the leader who is willing to work hard, get it done, and make sure it’s not about him or her; the leader who knows that influence is about developing the right habits for success.

Nearly half the actions leaders take every day aren’t choices—they’re habits. That’s why great leaders are intentional about what habits they develop and why. My goal is to show the path to long-term sustainable influence through these three key leadership building blocks.

Leadership is hard work, so leadership must be habitual work.

How is this book different than your first book, The Catalyst Leader?

My first book, The Catalyst Leader, was a big picture, destination book providing essentials for leadership for the next 30 years. A foundation book you might say. If you think of it in terms of an organization, The Catalyst Leader was the corporate and staff handbook.

H3 Leadership is more of a playbook of discipline that will help get you to the finish line. A practical application, daily practice, process, routine and “on the journey” book that can and should immediately transform the way you lead. What leadership looks like on a day-to-day basis. The organization playbook, daily map and gameplan focused on daily practice and discipline that will make your leadership come alive.

The Catalyst Leader provided the key essentials and H3 Leadership provides the key habits. Essentials are what you become, and habits are how you become the leader you desire to be.

H3 describes the “ready” leadership position. I played basketball growing up, and I remember many coaches talking about the ready position in basketball. The posture from which you can dribble, pass, or shoot. I believe that H3 Leadership describes the ready leadership position — the triple threat posture of a properly prepared leader:

  • Humble is internal leadership. Hearts.
  • Hungry is external leadership. Head.
  • Hustle is expression and extension leadership. Hands.

The phrase “humble, hungry, hustle” is my life and leadership mantra. If he had to describe his leadership style in 3 words, these would be it. So much of what I have worked for and want to see in the next generation is a combination of these three transformational habits. Humble, hungry and hustle describes the leader who realizes it’s not about them, is willing to work hard, and ultimately get it done. H3 Leaders know that influence is about developing the right habits for success.

H3 is practical. In the trenches, a bit chaotic, organic and dirty handed leadership. The dirt under your fingernails kind of leadership learned from digging the ditch, focused on the discipline, process, practice and journey of becoming a better leader. The everyday habits, not necessarily the sexy sizzle. The broccoli and vegetables, not necessarily the steak. Not always pretty but hopefully constantly practical. I’ve tried to be practical at every level. Combining experience and wisdom and practical from the trenches. From my story and the story of others. Put your hardhat on and let’s get to work!

You’re very open and honest about how you’ve led, especially Catalyst? Why did you decide to include so much about, frankly, what you feel like you did wrong?

It was important to me to shoot really straight in this book. The very nature of this book required a bit more transparency. But I would also say that I believe the leaders who will have the most influence and impact are the ones who are willing to be vulnerable and talk openly about their struggles and failures.

And that’s a hard thing for a lot of leaders to do. Many times, when we get to a point where other people are listening to us, and we’ve got something to manage––something to lose––we sort of go into the default mode of “Okay, make sure everything looks perfect.”

Today, people crave authenticity. This need has even influenced the way we shop and purchase our products from organizations. Today, customers buy from those we feel are trustworthy. Equally, we want to invest in people and companies that we can trust, not necessarily because they’re well known or largest or leaders in their industry.

Really, the first couple of chapters of the book are about defining and setting this foundation of “Man, you’ve got to be willing to be real with people around you if you want them to follow you.”

So often, leadership, especially self-help leadership and personal growth literature, can feel very pie in the sky––very esoteric. You’re philosophizing constantly.

Readers need a practical example that they can wrap their arms around––actually feel and see and experience the very specific thing that somebody has gone through. It’s one thing to tell others to be willing to share struggles and to talk about failures. It’s another thing to say, “Here’s what I’ve failed at.”

But the leaders I respect the most are the ones who continue to run the race well until the gun goes off, whether that’s because their life is over or they retire. That’s the posture of hungry: the idea that you constantly are learning and getting better. That’s the kind of leader I want to be. I think that’s the kind of leaders we need today.

I think it’s important for people to realize this is an ongoing journey.

Filed Under: 3 - Leadership, Interviews, WBN the Book

6 Lessons from What’s Best Next

August 20, 2015 by Matt Perman

I really enjoyed this review of What’s Best Next by Luke Simmons over at Faithful and Fruitful, a blog dedicated to equipping ministry leaders to be more faithful and fruitful.

He so well captures six key lessons from the book, which I underscore:

  1. The gospel makes productivity about love
  2. Everyday life provides many opportunities for good works that honor God
  3. Know what’s important and put it first
  4. Systems trump intentions
  5. Weekly planning is crucial
  6. Plan your day

Filed Under: WBN the Book

Kindle Version of What’s Best Next $1.99 Today Only

May 14, 2015 by Matt Perman

Zondervan has put What’s Best Next on sale today only for $1.99 as part of their e-book flash sale this week (see the other books in the sale as well).

If you haven’t picked it up yet, now is a great time! And either way, this sale is a great opportunity to spread the word further.

In honor of this sale, I’ve also reduced the price on my ebook How to Set Up Your Desk to $0.99. (Note: if the price on that isn’t active yet, it should be live soon.)

Filed Under: WBN the Book

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About

What’s Best Next exists to help you achieve greater impact with your time and energy — and in a gospel-centered way.

We help you do work that changes the world. We believe this is possible when you reflect the gospel in your work. So here you’ll find resources and training to help you lead, create, and get things done. To do work that matters, and do it better — for the glory of God and flourishing of society.

We call it gospel-driven productivity, and it’s the path to finding the deepest possible meaning in your work and the path to greatest effectiveness.

Learn More

About Matt Perman

Matt Perman started What’s Best Next in 2008 as a blog on God-centered productivity. It has now become an organization dedicated to helping you do work that matters.

Matt is the author of What’s Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Things Done and a frequent speaker on leadership and productivity from a gospel-driven perspective. He has led the website teams at Desiring God and Made to Flourish, and is now director of career development at The King’s College NYC. He lives in Manhattan.

Learn more about Matt

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Foundational Posts

3 Questions on Productivity
How to Get Your Email Inbox to Zero Every Day
Productivity is Really About Good Works
Management in Light of the Supremacy of God
The Resolutions of Jonathan Edwards in Categories
Business: A Sequel to the Parable of the Good Samaritan
How Do You Love Your Neighbor at Work?

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